Answer:
It is true that far fewer French immigrated to New France than did the British to the British colonies.
Step-by-step explanation:
The French and Indian War was the part of the Seven Years' War whose battlefield was in America. It was the fourth clash in a series of colonial wars between the French and the British, and it was marked by the difficulty by the French to defend their sparsely populated territories. The ratio was about 60,000 French to 2 million English settlers, which is why the French were forced to unite with the local population: the Indians.
Finally, the 9-year-old conflict ended with the Treaty of Paris in 1763, which was beneficial to the British as it granted Britain with almost all the French territories in North America, but at the same time laid the foundations for the birth of the separatist movement of the inhabitants of Thirteen Colonies.